Do you have a tall kid who gets a bunch of offensive rebounds
and just can't seem to put the ball back into the hoop. Try this drill. Two
people at a basket a shooter about foul line and the other kid in front of the
hoop. Tell the shooter to shoot the ball and try to miss, have the underneath
kid rebound the ball and put it back into the basket. (This drill paid immediate
dividends)

Dribble Tag

Everyone dribbles a ball and they play tag, must be in control
of ball when tagging someone, you may want to limit the area of play.

Knock Away

Everyone is in a confined area of the gym, everyone has a ball
ready to dribble, when I say go everyone must dribble while at the same time
trying to knock the ball out of the other players hand. Players who go outside
the zone, have their ball knock away or is not aggressive enough is out of the
game. (Thanks to kennedyb)

Races

Divide into two groups for full court races, i.e. dribble down
right handed and back left hand. Dribble down backwards, and back frontwards.
Dribble down and shoot till you make a basket, or shoot once and keep track of
points.

Countdown

During a the scrimmage I would start counting down from 10
(10-9-8-7-6 ...) Giving the players an idea what the end of a quarter is like,
it cut down on the those wild half court shots with 5 seconds to go.

Freeze Scrimmage

Kids love to scrimmage and coaches try to coach with drills. I
would do freeze scrimmage, I would blow the whistle and everyone was to freeze
right where they are. I would explain who was out of position, missed a open
person or someone was doing something right.

Trading cards

I would go down to the local card store and buy a box of
basketball trading cards, I would have contests and use the cards as prices. I
would very the contest so ever one would have a chance to win. i.e. Foul
shooting, lay up contest, team races.

3 x 5 Cards

I would copy drills, plays or defenses down on a 3 x5 card sort
them in the order I wanted to do them and put them in my back pocket, thus I had
a practice plan.

Practice Jerseys

Check the local thrift stores i.e. Goodwill, I was able to find
5 red jersey (didn't match but they were red). I never cared much for shirts and
skins in cold gyms and one year I had a girl turn out.

Bull Rush

It really emphasizes hustle, one-on-one moves and strong
defense. Plus, the kids really enjoy it. You have the group divided up into two
equal teams. Each team stands along the same baseline (separately), with the
first two players up for each team, standing where the key meets the baseline. I
roll, bounce or throw the ball out into the court, and when I say "go", both
players run to the ball, trying to get it. They are allowed to dive and hustle
their best to get the ball. Once they get it, they have to dribble back to the
basket and try to score, with the other player playing defense. If the ball is
stolen, then they switch offense/defense. I usually give a time limit of 30-45
seconds and that makes them concentrate on end-of-game situations. (Thanks to
Jon Douglas, Hamilton, Ontario)

Fullcourt variation. I would line the players up foul line
extended, opposite of each other, stand underneath the basket and roll the ball
out to the foul line.

Down Low Drill

Place one ball on each block down low, have player start in the
middle and work on sliding to each block and putting the ball in the hoop. Time
the player and keep track of how many they put in and the total attempted.
Currently in a minute, my best player is doing about 18 out of 25. This has
helped with using the backboard down low, moving for the ball. (Thanks to
Jocelyn Perez, New York, New York)

Beanbag Dribble

Players pair up and each player has a basketball. While
dribbling their own ball they then play catch with a bean-bag, about the size of
the palm of the hand. First dribbling with the right hand and tossing and
catching the bean bag with the left. This can be tricky since most kids are
right handed! Variations two beanbags and kids group into threes and form a
triangle toss the bag around the triangle. (Thanks to Joe Ralko, Regina,
Canada)

Offensive Set Up and Plays

With younger kids I would use a 1-3-1 offensive set up and give
them some basic movement ideas and let them create from there. Kids tend to look
like un-oiled robots when trying to run elaborate a plays. Sometimes I have them
pass four times before shooting, I use two man games, for example: the baseline
guy will come up and screens, then the wing guys cuts to the basket, or have the
wing guy go down set a screen for the baseline guy who can pop open for a shot,
or have the baseline guy move to the side the ball is being passed, have the
post (foul line guy) roll to the hoop when the ball goes to the wing or down to
the baseline guy. Have wings and the point guards pass the ball around then
reverse it back to wing guy for a shot. There are many possibilities, use your
imagination and your players strengths.

Parent Relations

As for dealing with parents, it is one of those things, as long
as you are winning, their kid is playing, and you are not yelling at him, they
will think your a good coach. Some hints with dealing with parents. Keep them
informed, don't rely on the kids, no matter what age, I would hand out a packet,
that would have all the parents first names, phone numbers, schedule, special
league game rules, and a letter to the parents saying how you are going to coach
and to please call you or an assistant, or a team parent who can act as a third
party, if they have an issue. The tip sheet of course. Try not to do things that
will embarrass the kid while they are playing, try to sub on positive events,
don't yell at a kid across the court. Communicate and be friendly.